
Ballachulish slate quarries could be reopened: Historic Scotland is
to publish a study into the viability of resuming mine operations.
Apparently there is also commercial interest in this Argyll quarry
with a huge demand across Scotland. Mar 2008
Scottish Slate - Foudland Slate Quarrries
[mark chalmers]
For many Scots, the Glens of Foudland are familiar only through winter
road reports: over this wild stretch of country runs the snowbound
A96 road, which links Aberdeen with Inverness. Some will look up to
the north-facing slopes of the Hill of Foudland and notice the overgrown
rock faces. Few will realise that these scars are man-made: spoil
heaps created by the once-extensive quarries which supplied the North-east
with roofing slate. Today, these slopes are being eyed with renewed
interest.
From the first workings on Easdale in the 1550s, until
last two slate quarries at Ballachulish closed in 1955, quarries
spread along the Highland Line supplied both domestic demand and the
export trade. These ranged from the "Slate Islands"
of Easdale, Seil, Luing and Belnahua;
at Ballachulish itself; the "Slate Belt" running
from Luss and Aberfoyle to Birnam and Craiglea; also in the "Slate
Hills" above the Glens of Foudland. Now, whenever roof repairs
are required to old buildings, matching slate has to be robbed from
another structure; this path leads in ever-decreasing circles, since
fewer and fewer old buildings are demolished, yet more and more need
maintenance. Historic Scotland realised that this Catch-22 situation
wasn't sustainable indefinitely, and instigated a search for sources
of fresh slate.
The obvious first step was to look at the quarries which were abandoned
last century. So far, the Khartoum quarry at Ballachulish, and the
Hill of Foudland quarries have been examined and blocks of slate removed
for analysis at the University of Paisley. Although everyone believes
they know the colour of "slate", its full spectrum speaks
of subtly different origins: Ballachulish slate is a deep blue-black;
Snowdonian is dark purple; Westmorland slate is a shade of sea green;
Easdale is gunmetal grey; Birnam slate is almost violet in colour
and Foudland slate is midnight blue with a crystalline sheen.
The Foudland quarries were opened up in 1754 local knowledge
having unearthed a belt of slate running along the west border of
Aberdeenshire from Auchterless towards the Tap o' Noth near Gartly.
At their peak a century later, the quarries produced almost one million
hand-split slates per year which is an amazing total given the
harsh conditions on the hill. The quarriers sat on the ground whilst
cleaving the slate: but they did at least have small shelters
scathies with slate walls and timber roofs to hold off the worst
of the weather. At up to 1500 feet above sea level, and facing north,
the quarries shut down each year with the onset of winter.
The slate industry here was never heavily mechanised and although
quarrymen from Wales were drafted in to train the local workforce,
Scottish quarriers were actually more efficient, recovering twice
the amount of quarried material as usable slates. Due to its often
poorly-defined cleavage, Scottish slate is not capable of being
split into the smooth, regular slates which come from abroad:
blocks were cut to whatever size could be produced. Foudland quarries
supplied slate for buildings within a 50 mile radius including
Balmoral Castle since this was the practical limit of horse-and-cart
haulage. Paradoxically, the coming of the Great North of Scotland
Railway from Aberdeen to Huntly should have allowed Foudland slate
to be distributed further afield: in fact, it enabled cheaper slate
to be imported. The turn of the 20th century saw a slump in the building
industry this recurs with monotonous regularity every few years
and the Foudland slate quarries closed 100 years ago, as depressed
demand and competition robbed their market.
The early conclusion of the foray into the Foudlands is that major
reserves of workable slate are certainly available, but the manner
of working these old quarries has led to a collapse of their working
faces. Quarrying started too high up the hill, and only the top of
the strata were worked, all the time dumping spoil immediately below.
Since the quarries at Foudland cover three square kilometres of hillside,
we have literally only scratched the surface. In the largest of the
old workings, the Gutter Quarry, all the faces have suffered erosion
and weathering: the freeze-thaw action of a century of winters has
created fantastic stratified patterns, and the waste tips are overgrown
with heather. Another issue is that there is no water supply close
to the most-promising of the old quarries and water is
essential for lubrication during drilling and cutting: ironically,
water is in surfeit further down the hill, and dams were built to
harness it to drive a mill which cut and polished the slate.
So, how to resolve Catch-22? A beginning may be "snatch"
mining where useful slate is recovered from the waste tips
at Foudland, it is known that after the quarries closed officially,
individual quarrymen continued to win slate at least until the Great
War. Traxcavators would scrape back the overburden to expose a workable
face in the past, Foudland slate was quarried using a combination
of timber wedges and iron pinches to lever blocks free, whereas black
powder was used for blasting at Easdale and Ballachulish, to great
destructive effect. Today, the advent of diamond wire saws and compressed
air for drilling would reduce wastage.
Theres a strong economic case for re-opening, since the repair
and refurbishment sector has high margins, and a Scottish slate producer
would have a captive market. In addition, architectural slate
for flooring and cladding are profitable areas, and a use has finally
been found for the spoil: crushers can turn it into slate chips for
hard landscaping. We should take pride in using materials whose subtle
colour and tone is sympathetic to their context; which sustain our
native industries but most of all, which create buildings that
look like they belong. The rebirth of Scottish slate may start here,
in the lunar bleakness of Foudland.
Jul
05
[adrian welch]
It can be frustrating for specifiers to find EU rules appear to
prevent specifying timber from the UK. With stone it is easier due
to typological classification defining a specific location, eg Caithness
stone only comes from Scotland but European Oak can come from anywhere
in the world.
There appear to be a number of problems as I see it in specifying
Scottish
materials, namely: -
lack of resources available eg open quarries, sufficient hardwood
forests
lack of knowledge by specifiers
lack of skills in craftsmen/builders
lack of major state funding of the above
Feedback on ways to encourage sustainable specification ie local products
or at least UK products, please mail me.
Photo of Ballachulish Slate Quarry:

photo © Muriel Welch
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